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morpheme of wisconsin,uniform,trasplant,generative?
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Here's a complete list of the inflectional morphemes of English, ... boy's boys' big bigger biggest sing sings singing sang sung Please tell me you're kidding. Why? What did I miss? Have you ever read C. C. Fries's *American
misc.education.language.english
by
peter t. daniels
3 yr 82 days ago
American English, Grammar, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Songs, Arts, Music, Languages, Morphemes
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Me neither. If the saying is meaningful to those that ... who put forward explanations which (to me) don't stack up. Sorry, but this has me stumped. What would either of you make of "I really care" used sarcastically to mean
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 156 days ago
Articles, Negatives, Constructions, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Usages, Australia, Languages, Apologies, Morphemes, Indefinite, Negations
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} It's common knowledge that Beyonce' invented the word "Bootylicious", } but did she in fact originate the entire "-licious" ... and Beyonce' respectively. Did they say they invented them? Or is that just where you
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Dear all, I have some questions about how words are divided in dictionary entries. It seems to be an arbitrary business. Not entirely arbitrary, but certainly complicated. The Chicago Style Manual is an American source for rules, if I remember
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In a volume of Tolkien's posthumously published works (War of ... of the section, but is there any defense of that? I've read in one of the usage books that some writers use "must" instead of "had to" for the past ...
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However, most English-speakers don't recognize the two German morphemes (the old-fashioned spelling of modern ) and , but instead see and the familiar noun , thus mishyphenate the name as "Roths- child" and mispronounce it as
alt.usage.english
by
r f
5 yr 330 days ago
American English, Spelling, Nouns, Countries, United Kingdom, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Languages, Arts, Genitives, Morphemes
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I think you are wrong about "me and my wife ... stands by itself as the subject of a finite predicate. I keep reading this "people are applying rules as they speak" stuff. My opinion is that no one thinks about ... thing when they
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 363 days ago
Dialects, Marriage, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Speeches, Languages, Predicates, Morphemes
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